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Molecular detection of SARS-CoV-2 and differentiation of Omicron and Delta variant strains

Authors :
Wai Ning Tiffany Tsui
Vaughn Hamill
Lance Noll
Nanyan Lu
Elizabeth Poulsen Porter
Donald Harbidge
Emily Cox
Claire Richardson
Mark Gray
Tesfaalem Sebhatu
Kyle Goerl
Susan Brown
Gregg Hanzlicek
Jamie Retallick
Jianfa Bai
Source :
Transboundary and emerging diseases. 69(5)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The SARS-CoV-2 virus is the causative agent of COVID-19 and has undergone continuous mutations throughout the pandemic. The more transmissible Omicron variant has quickly spread and is replacing the Delta variant as the most prevalent strain globally, including in the United States. A new molecular assay that can detect and differentiate both the Delta and Omicron variants was developed. A collection of 660,035 SARS-CoV-2 full- or near-full genomes, including 169,454 Delta variant and 24,202 Omicron variant strains, were used for primer and probe designs. In silico data analysis predicted an assay coverage of 99% of all strains, including 99% of the Delta and 99% of Omicron strains. The Omicron variant differential test was designed based on the Δ31-33 aa deletion in the N-gene, which is present in the original B.1.1.529 main genotype, BA.1, as well as in BA.2 and BA.3 subtypes. Therefore, the assay should detect the majority of all Omicron variant strains. Standard curves generated with human clinical samples indicated that the PCR amplification efficiencies were 104%, 90.7% and 90.4% for the Omicron, Delta, and non-Delta/non-Omicron wild-type genotypes, respectively. Correlation coefficients of the standard curves were all 0.99. The detection limit of the assay was 14.3, 32.0, and 21.5 copies per PCR reaction for Omicron, Delta, and wild-type genotypes, respectively. The assay was designed to specifically detect SAR-CoV-2 strains. Selected samples with Omicron, Delta and wild-type genotypes identified by the RT-qPCR assay were also confirmed by sequencing. The assay did not detect any animal coronavirus-positive samples that were tested. Human nasal swab samples that previously tested positive (n = 182) or negative (n = 42) for SARS-CoV-2 by the ThermoFisher TaqPath COVID-19 Combo Kit, produced the same result with the new assay. Among positive samples, 55.5% (101/182), 23.1% (42/182), and 21.4% (39/182) were identified as Omicron, Delta, and non-Omicron/non-Delta wild-type genotypes, respectively.

Details

ISSN :
18651682
Volume :
69
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transboundary and emerging diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....85efa7954f15c58ceb5ceeb81115d77c